Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Salvatore Maranzano. Salvatore Maranzano (Italian: [salvaˈtoːre maranˈtsaːno]; July 31, 1886 – September 10, 1931), nicknamed Little Caesar, [1] was an Italian-American mobster from the town of Castellammare del Golfo, Sicily, and an early Cosa Nostra boss who led what later would become the Bonanno crime family in New York City.

    • Gabe Paoletti
    • Joe Masseria, 1931. In 1930, a Sicilian faction led by Salvatore Maranzano waged war against a Sicilian-American group led by Joe Masseria for control of Mafia activity in the United States.
    • Albert Anastasia, 1957. Detectives take notes and examine the barbershop of New York's Park Sheraton Hotel, where the body of Murder Inc.' s Albert Anastasia lies, partially covered, on the floor after his murder by unknown gunmen.
    • The Saint Valentine's Day Massacre, 1929. On February 14, 1929, seven members of the North Side Gang were trapped in a garage, lined up against the wall, and shot to death by members of Al Capone's rival gang, which was at war with the Irish North Siders for control of Chicago.
    • Carmine Galante, 1979. The body of Carmine "Lilo" Galante (top right), boss of the Bonanno crime family, lies outside of Joe & Mary's Italian-American Restaurant in Brooklyn.
  2. Sep 12, 2023 · The assassins entered the waiting area, brandished badges to the secretary, and forced the nine other waiting room guests against a wall. Upon entering Maranzano’s office, a melee ensued. Maranzano’s throat was slashed and his body riddled with bullets. The killers raced to the stairwell and into the history books of great gangland mysteries.

  3. Aug 5, 2023 · After seeing his rival Joe "The Boss" Masseria betrayed and dispatched, Salvatore Maranzano became the chief Mafia leader in the New York area. Because of the city's significance to Sicilian and Italian criminal organizations throughout America, Maranzano summoned leaders from around the country to a meeting in Wappingers Falls in 1931 (per Selwyn Raab's "Five Families").

    • William Fischer
  4. Childhood & Early Life. Salvatore Maranzano was born on July 31, 1886 in the town of Castellammare del Golfo in Sicily, Italy. He had three brothers including one named Nicolo Maranzano. During his early life, he wanted to become a priest and even went to school to get necessary education to pursue his goals.

  5. Birth: July 31st, 1886 - Castellammare Del Golfo, Sicily. Death: September 10th, 1931 - New York City. Salvatore Maranzano was a prominent Italian-American gangster during the Prohibition era of American history. Maranzano was a unique gangster in that he held one of the highest titles in all the mafia, even for a short period of time.

  6. People also ask

  7. Oct 13, 2024 · A new American Mafia required a new approach, and many of Maranzano’s minions believed he wasn’t cut out for it. And in a bitterly ironic twist, it was Salvatore Maranzano’s own Brutus, Lucky Luciano, who finally put an end to the tyrant’s rule. Wikimedia Commons Charles “Lucky” Luciano poses for a mugshot in New York. 1931.

  1. People also search for